Fewer than 10 vaquitas, the world’s smallest porpoise, survive in the wild today, experts say. Illegal fishing has decimated ...
Wildlife trafficking is the fourth-largest source of illicit revenue globally after drugs, human smuggling and counterfeit goods, according to Homeland Security Investigations.
FAU, SeaWorld San Diego, and the San Diego Natural History Museum have joined forces to scan the rare skeleton of the vaquita ...
Scientists only learned of their existence in 1958 when a few vaquita skulls were found washed ashore. Because of their shy nature, vaquitas are hard for researchers to observe. They tend to swim ...
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Surfer on MSNEvading Cartels & Sharks On A 1000 Mile Paddle In MexicoSean Jansen spent most of his teenage and young adult life driving south across the border to surf along the Baja Peninsula ...
The greatest threat to the vaquita marina is the gillnets used in the illegal fishing of totoaba, a fish endemic to the Gulf of California whose swim bladder is highly valued in Asian markets ...
Covering one packed agenda, four interventions and six hectic days, EIA campaigners share the highlights of the 78th meeting ...
Heartbreaking images reveal the deadly impact of plastic pollution on ocean wildlife as Trump goes 'back to plastic' by ...
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